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Koshinage (hip throw) allows you turn your opponent while pulling him onto his hips then straightens his knees and throws him over onto his back.

A powerful technique with some many variations that can be applied. Perhaps one of the more aggressive techniques that is not practiced a lot in most Aikido dojos. I came across this interesting video showing variations. How often do you practice this technique in your dojo? Do you use the many variations?

I don't understand what is aggressive in koshinage? How a technique can be aggressive? - I think only the living beings can be aggressive.

Koshinage is quite nice technique, but ther is nothing exciting about it. We do it in every class, sometimes 3-4 variations. Even the beginners after 2-3 month of practice can do it in very safe way.

It can be done against any attack and from any entry to an attack (i.e. from ikkyo->koshi, nikkyo->koshi, iriminage-> koshi, shihonage->koshi, juji-koshi etc.). So there are infinity of possibilities, at the end we can say that Aikido it is a Koshinage

It doesn't even have any joint locks (or rather it can, but need not necessarily), so it's less painful or potentially damaging than a lot of techniques I can think of.

Sure, the fall is slightly different than a more horizontal throw, so you have to learn to fall, but I don't know if it's really worse than any other throw, if the person knows how to throw and/or you know how to fall.

In the USAF it's a required technique (or rather family of techniques) starting at 2 kyu and above, so not learning it isn't really an option. If someone has just started or doesn't know how to fall or whatever, they just practice the entrance and loading but don't follow through with the throw.

Its not required in our six kyu system until 3rd kyu.
Personally I would be happy skipping it.

Having said that, its not done that often, thankfully.
I have seen the higher kyus doing it - but in all honesty it seems that extra weight would be on your knee in this hip throw.

My knee has been recovering after getting hurt a couple weeks back...and the idea of techniques that put undue pressure to the knee isnt really my cup of tea. (But some people love these type of moves...suppose people that come to Aikido are more of the 'wrestling type' to begin with...I like boxing, so Aikido was an interesting move for me.)

Properly done you don't lift uke up in koshinage (like one often do, but not always, in judo waza). You just shift the balance over from one side to the other. No lifting and no undue stress on knees. Properly done that is.

Properly done you don't lift uke up in koshinage (like one often do, but not always, in judo waza). You just shift the balance over from one side to the other. No lifting and no undue stress on knees. Properly done that is.

/J

Thats good to know - I was under the impression it was like picking up and throwing a sack of potatoes. (Sorry couldnt think of a better example.) Well, maybe I can - it looked like a Judo type move...which all of Judo looks like a strain and struggle to me of carrying other peoples weight around. (maybe why I liked boxing?)

There are different versions of koshinage, some are more judoesque than others.

Quote:

Dalen Johnson wrote:

Thats good to know - I was under the impression it was like picking up and throwing a sack of potatoes. (Sorry couldnt think of a better example.) Well, maybe I can - it looked like a Judo type move...which all of Judo looks like a strain and struggle to me of carrying other peoples weight around. (maybe why I liked boxing?)

My teacher told me that koshinage is much the same as kokyo nage.
The difference is in the placement of your hips.
With koshinage, you put your hips in front of uke.
And uke 'stumbles' over your deriére instead of doing a nice roll.

The pain when executed at full speed from a certain height can be painful. Really it depends on the person who is executing the throw. It can knock the breath out of you if you don't brake your fall correctly, even when breaking the fall it stings a little. For that reason and a little research on the net , some people shy away from it. Usually most schools teach Koshinage at slightly higher levels.

Ooops, that's me. Really, that's just a few examples of koshinage. It can be done in hundreds of quite different ways.

When I was young, I loved doing it (more than having it done to me...), but now I teach it quite rarely. I think any koshinage can reasonably be substituted with a kokyunage, as stated in one of the posts above. On the other hand, koshinage can be done so smoothly that it is in no way more "aggressive" than any other aikido technique.

It is my experience that koshinage is in most dojos (probably including my own) not practiced nearly enough to make it that smooth and comfortable. My first Japanese teacher, Toshikazu Ichimura, did it a lot - and he was very good at it. So did his teacher, Shoji Nishio, who actually told me that he introduced it at Hombu when he started to practice there.
Except for something in the 1935 film, I have not seen footage of Osensei doing koshinage. But I might just be forgetful.

Anyway, it is good to learn, since it is part of the aikido curriculum. But it takes some serious efforts to get reasonably skilled at it - both as tori and as uke.
The downside for tori is that it feels very awkward to do before that skill is reached, and the downside for uke is that ukemi is very uncomfortabel before tori reaches that skill. Kind of a Catch 22.

FWIW. Saito M. sensei said that the founder told him that he loved koshinage, and that he wouldn't mind doing it all day long. There are a great number of basic koshinage from most attacks as Saito taught it. So Nishio might have "reintroduced" it into aikikai but most of his koshinage came from his judo background (even if he aiki-fied them). Still I wonder. Present doshu does them almost identicaly as Saito did...

When it comes to ukemi for koshinage, I personally find it to be an almost fail-safe way to teach high crash-falls. If nage just hold on to that one arm, then uke will land perfectly by default. The only thing one has to remind them of is to tuck that arm in under nage or grab nages arm or gi or something, so uke doesn't panic and stretches for the ground with that arm. That's when accidents happen.

We don't do koshinage at my dojo nearly as often as I'd like. Its just fun! The general consensus though is that it is a technique that is easily countered if you don't sufficiently distract uke with atemi or whatever first: you ARE basically turning your back to uke at one point, however short, so his attention better be elsewhere.

For ukemi we were taught to reach around nage with our free hand and grab his gi's lapel, so that it provides a pivot point to rotate around and ensuring you properly flip and land on a shoulder/side/better padded body part rather than your head, wrist, elbow, etc. The act of reaching around nage to grab also simulates uke's natural response to what nage's doing: he's gonna try to bear hug uke from behind.

---------------------------------
train as if the tengu will never visit, execute as if they already have

If there are beginners who can't take the fall, typically they will still attempt to throw as nage, but as uke, we will just load them up on the hip and then let them down.

{rant mode on}
This is the thing that has always bugged me about how it is taught: if it is not really meant to be a technique based on having to carry uke's weight, then why the heck is it considered valuable or right to teach people to do the technique that way???? If, as the judo folks keep telling me, the ukemi can be really easily taught and is no big deal, why do we make it a big deal and then mess up the technique by turning it into a static "load up uke" thing?
{rant mode off}

If, as the judo folks keep telling me, the ukemi can be really easily taught and is no big deal, why do we make it a big deal and then mess up the technique by turning it into a static "load up uke" thing?

I think it´s because most aikido ukemi consists of uke "accepting" the throw rather than actually being thrown. But in koshinage you are actually thrown for real which scares people both as uke and as tori. Those who train judo get used to actually being thrown from the very start...

Quote:

Janet Rosen wrote:

{rant mode on}If, as the judo folks keep telling me, the ukemi can be really easily taught and is no big deal, why do we make it a big deal and then mess up the technique by turning it into a static "load up uke" thing?

I think it's just so you get a feel for where on your body they are supposed to be in contact with, and how to enter and set up the technique, what your posture and so on are supposed to be. Plus, as you're learning if you do it less than ideally you may end up with more of their weight on you then you're 'supposed to', so in that sense learning how could help avoid injury (e.g. to your back). At least that's what it seems like to me. In any case, I've found the exercise helpful.

I think it´s because most aikido ukemi consists of uke "accepting" the throw rather than actually being thrown. But in koshinage you are actually thrown for real which scares people both as uke and as tori. Those who train judo get used to actually being thrown from the very start...

When I was doing JuJitsu, koshinage was one of our 10 basic techniques from white -> yellow/green belt. It was taught more as a Judo-type throw (nage pulls uke in while spinning in to pull him over the hip.)

Nearly every koshinage I've seen in an Aikido dojo is from ryote tori, and has the uke coming around behind nage, with nage kinda sticking his butt out for uke to fall over. I've also almost never seen anyone *not* wearing a hakama performing it.

The fall for koshinage itself is actually not that bad if you're even moderately good at taking ukemi.

Now, ippon seoi nage (one armed shoulder throw - another of our basics in JuJitsu) was a *really* scary fall to take at the beginning, because taking the fall, your body almost rotates 180 degrees forward, and you *have* to tuck your head. For the beginners, we would load them up and let them fall off the side of the back, which was a little easier (but still kinda scary until you got used to it.)

Nearly every koshinage I've seen in an Aikido dojo is from ryote tori, and has the uke coming around behind nage, with nage kinda sticking his butt out for uke to fall over. I've also almost never seen anyone *not* wearing a hakama performing it.

In the iwama tradition we do several variations on koshinage, except the "koshinage specific"-entries from different attacks we also do it from more or less every ikkyo and shihonage entry. And sometimes from juji gatame.

Quote:

Now, ippon seoi nage (one armed shoulder throw - another of our basics in JuJitsu) was a *really* scary fall to take at the beginning, because taking the fall, your body almost rotates 180 degrees forward, and you *have* to tuck your head. For the beginners, we would load them up and let them fall off the side of the back, which was a little easier (but still kinda scary until you got used to it.)

I have dabbled some in goshindo (a swedish light-mma system, hard contact to the body but with semi contact to the head), in one class a judo instructor made a class with lots of beginners do ippon seionage without problems. He did not even mention the ukemi, just focusing on the throw. No injuries and people did not even seemed to think that it was a big deal.

Yes, Peter, but in ippon seionage nage controls the arm, and forces uke around in a "safe" spin. In many aikido koshinage, nage don't control "that" arm and uke has to make sure it's out-of-the-way and not between the mat and ukes weight.

That said, done right I still think koshinage is one of the safest and easiest way to train high break falls.